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Product Synthesis

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14 contributions to Product Synthesis
The first ONCE product from 37signals
You've probably already heard me talking about this, but the first ONCE product from 37signal is available now, it's called Campfire. The idea is that instead of paying for Slack forever, you pay for this once, I really hope more of these types of products take off. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAzRUbE1AAw
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New comment Feb 15
The first ONCE product from 37signals
1 like • Feb 2
@Jonathan Courtney what a surprise :o
0 likes • Feb 3
@David Finnegan hmmm asking a developer about operating technology is like asking an automotive engineer what it takes to repair and maintain a car. In my experience they know the theory but massively under estimate what it really takes. Even if the effort and cost has reduced if it is not a core and strategy competency it is could end up being a distraction.
Why people are salty about Product Discovery
You might have spotted a bit of the shade being thrown in Teresa Torres' / Product Discovery's direction on LinkedIn over the last week. I'm not going to wade into those murky waters on LinkedIn (for now), but feels like fair game in our little community! If you're out of the loop - the main criticism is that Product Discovery is too focused on moving fast to reduce risk - instead of more typical UX/CX research where you take time to draw conclusions and discover the truth. It's basically a discussion on the 'depth' of the research. This is a fairly common criticism of Product Discovery as an approach, and unsurprisingly it's usually coming from UX Design & Researcher (who might be more than a little biased). I'm not going to get into the pros and cons of each approach, because it's not a case of which is better and worse. Instead, I'm going to talk about the reason people are salty about Product Discovery - Perceived Value. The perceived value of 'typical' UX research is low. It's seen as time consuming, it doesn't fit comfortably into most product development cycle, and generally the outcomes of research don't give clear direction to the team. When teams are calculating if the time spent is worth the results they'll get, more often than not they'll choose to simply skip UX research to save time. Across my 12 years as a UX Designer this was ALWAYS the challenge when it came to getting research into the process, and it is still a major challenge in design teams today. Product Discovery on the other hand is a response to the perceived value of UX Research. It's leaner, more accessible, more collaborative and has a clear purpose of driving business and product outcomes in a customer centric way. The reason people are salty about Product Discovery taking off is simple, it's because it challenges their notion of what is valuable, and it's being adopted much more quickly than UX research ever was. I say all this as someone who's spun up multiple research labs over the years, done thousands of usability tests, run dozen of Design Sprints, and has always been a strong advocate for more research in Product.
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New comment Feb 10
1 like • Jan 25
@Tim Höfer it's the word "still" that I index on with your comment. Why would it be different? Humans are political and agenda driven animals, that hasn't changed in all our history. Why would I expect anything different now?
0 likes • Jan 26
@Tim Höfer I find violent agreement happens often!
Weekly Synthesis #4 - It was nice while it lasted...
Hey Everyone, it's time for another Weekly Synthesis! This week we're talking about; - Lot's of exciting Innovation coming out of CES! - More layoffs - time to panic? - What's new in AI this week? - Highlighting some great posts you might have missed! Have a great week everyone! 👊
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New comment Jan 23
Weekly Synthesis #4 - It was nice while it lasted...
1 like • Jan 22
@David Finnegan Wayfair just cut 1600 on Friday which is hitting the same size as last year almost to the day!
0 likes • Jan 23
@David Finnegan I just teased Bruce McCarthy with this same image and he admitted he had already ordered one! And wishes it looked like a communicator - he's a big trekkie!
Is the 'AI Product Manager' title ridiculous, or am I missing something?
AI is getting slapped onto anything and everything right now, and there's a lot of interesting shit happening in the space, but there's also a lot of ridiculousness coming out of the space. The one that seems the most ridiculous is the AI Product Manager title. I get that there's specific domain/technology expertise you need to work with an AI product, but how does that differ from any other 'non-ai' product? We don't have 'FinTech Product Managers' or 'Cyber Security Product Managers' - but for some reason we need 'AI Product Managers?' It feels a lot like when UX became the hot new trend in Design like 15 years ago, and before long every designer has slapped UX into their title because it added a few grand to their salary, and then they just cracked on doing the same UI focused work they were doing before. Am I missing something? 🤔
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New comment Jan 18
1 like • Jan 18
Actually you say we don't have FinTech PMs... but that is not apples for apples. We do see a lot of API PMs and some other growing areas of "speciality". I feel that is a more equivalent comparison. Like you I'm sceptical of the value of it but there is definitely a trend in titles (I might even already have a post scheduled on LI on this subject, I know I planned to but might not have yet). It feels like an extra overlay on the Expert / IC career track to specialise in a technology area, but that is also potentially a symptom of the overly technical focus of many PMs today.
1 like • Jan 18
@David Finnegan I tend to see AI PMs as PMs who know how to apply AI to problems, not PMs who are building the AI. It's a subtle but important difference.
How NOT to get people back to the office...
Not sure if you caught this incredible video from WebMD yet, but it's a masterclass on how to ensure people definitely won't want to come back to the office. Hilarious corporate cringe I just had to share.
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New comment Jan 18
How NOT to get people back to the office...
3 likes • Jan 15
OMG that is BAD! What's even worse is that I can image people I used to work with doing exactly the same thing!
1 like • Jan 16
Here was the better and more fun KPMG one from a while back! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LJLuIiqGKcc
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Phil Hornby
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26points to level up
@phil-hornby-3103
I'm a product person that helps entrepreneurial product teams be successful. https://www.linkedin.com/in/philhornby/

Active 13h ago
Joined Nov 27, 2023
"up-north", UK
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